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This book explains why the European Union (EU) Member States - in
response to the euro crisis - agreed to establish banking union,
despite previous objections, and why they chose its hybrid
institutional design. Analysing its establishment from 2012 to
2020, the book offers a comprehensive view of the preferences of
the Member States and EU institutions, as well as of the
negotiation dynamics and latest developments in the three pillars
of banking union, namely, the Single Supervisory Mechanism, the
Single Resolution Mechanism and the common backstop, and the
European deposit insurance scheme. Furthermore, empirically, the
book looks beyond the usual focus of the northern and southern
coalition of states to underline the influence of powerful smaller
Member States in the intergovernmental bargaining process. Adopting
a range of theoretical perspectives, it questions the solidity of
the northern versus southern camps and reveals distinctive and
particular positioning from individual countries during the
process. This book will be of key interest to scholars and students
of European financial market regulation, European economic
governance, EU institutions, European integration theory and EU
politics more broadly.
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